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Sao Paulo Governor Quietly Emerges as Likely Bolsonaro Successor

Khabor Wala Desk

Published: 24th September 2025, 6:17 AM

Sao Paulo Governor Quietly Emerges as Likely Bolsonaro Successor

Although he actively denies it, one name is increasingly mentioned as a potential successor to convicted former president Jair Bolsonaro at the helm of Brazil’s right-wing politics: Sao Paulo Governor Tarcisio de Freitas.

With Bolsonaro, 70, preoccupied with appealing a 27-year prison sentence for plotting a failed coup, Brazil’s significant conservative electorate is moving toward the 2026 presidential elections without a clear champion.

Background and Profile

Attribute Details
Name Tarcisio de Freitas
Age 50
Place of Birth Rio de Janeiro
Current Position Governor of Sao Paulo (since 2022)
Education Military academy, Rio de Janeiro
Military Service Retired as Captain at 33
Previous Roles National Director of Infrastructure & Transport under Dilma Rousseff; Minister of Infrastructure under Bolsonaro
Political Orientation Traditional conservative, technocrat
Public Image Polished, pragmatic, competent, approachable yet forceful at podium

Political Positioning

A former army engineer and Bolsonaro government minister, Freitas governs Sao Paulo, a state of 46 million people and an economic powerhouse with a GDP comparable to Belgium or Sweden.

Polls suggest Freitas is the most likely candidate to challenge leftist President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. However, he appears uneasy about being seen as Bolsonaro’s heir.

“Jair Bolsonaro is our greatest political leader,” Freitas has stated, while expectations remain high that Bolsonaro will appoint a successor. Other potential successors include Michelle Bolsonaro, his wife, or Senator Flavio Bolsonaro, his son.

Freitas is more measured and traditional than the far-right Bolsonaro, blending technocratic efficiency with pragmatic leadership. His advisors describe him as “unafraid of taking action.”

“If being pragmatic means finding immediate solutions to people’s problems, I agree with that description,” Freitas told AFP last week.

Political Style and Public Persona

Polished and poised, with an intense gaze and faint facial scars, Freitas appears approachable in public but becomes forceful on the podium, delivering memorised statistics fluently.

  • Competent and Shrewd: A European diplomat remarked,”Freitas is competent and quite shrewd. But the Bolsonaro base hasn’t disappeared — as a candidate, he will have to win over the radical wing.”
  • Measured Yet Fiery: Ahead of Bolsonaro’s coup verdict, Freitas condemned what he called the Supreme Court’s “dictatorship.” He supports a controversial congressional push to grant amnesty to hundreds convicted of coup-related crimes, including Bolsonaro, and has stated he would pardon Bolsonaro if president.”Amnesty can help pacify the country. Brazil needs it to move forward,” he said.

Career Trajectory

  • Born in Rio de Janeiro, Freitas moved to Sao Paulo for military training and retired at 33 to enter civil service.
  • His first prominent role was as national director of infrastructure and transport under Dilma Rousseff.
  • Bolsonaro, impressed by his technocratic efficiency, appointed him Infrastructure Minister in 2019 and later supported his gubernatorial campaign.

Political scientist Leonardo Paz of the Getulio Vargas Foundation notes: “The establishment sees him as an effective operator who wouldn’t spark the kind of unnecessary controversy Bolsonaro did.”

Policy Positions and Controversies

Issue Freitas’ Position / Criticism
Economy Criticises Lula for prioritising ideology over fiscal responsibility; insists on fiscal discipline
Amnesty Supports amnesty for coup-related convicts, including Bolsonaro
International Relations Criticised for failing to condemn US tariffs under Trump
Public Security Oversaw the sharpest rise in police killings in Brazil (61% increase in 2024 vs 3% national decrease)
Human Rights Accused by two NGOs of tacitly tolerating police abuses; responded bluntly: “I don’t care”

Freitas has defended his approach to governance, emphasising fiscal prudence: “There can be no social justice without fiscal responsibility.”

Under his tenure, Sao Paulo has seen the steepest rise in deaths from police interventions. Between 2023 and 2024, fatalities from police actions jumped 61 percent, while the national average fell by 3 percent.

As Brazil approaches the 2026 elections, Freitas represents a technocratic, pragmatic alternative to Bolsonaro’s fiery far-right style. While his measured approach appeals to the conservative establishment, he must still navigate the radical Bolsonaro base and criticisms from the left over human rights and economic policies.

His polished public persona, technocratic efficiency, and willingness to act suggest he could emerge as a serious contender, quietly positioning himself as a likely heir to Bolsonaro’s political legacy.

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